Soldiers & Celebrities

Rutherford B. Hayes was President from 1877 to 1881, so when the Hayeses signed the squares

he was former President Hayes. He was followed by Chester Arthur, who served from 1881-1885 and died in 1886. Arthur also signed a square.

This quilt was documented in the Wisconsin project, when it was noted: "The quilt was found in an attic in Boston, and was purchased from an antique dealer in Connecticut. The signatures on the quilt are autographs of prominent persons in the Boston area and includes Presidents Arthur and Hayes."

The quilt also contains signatures of many Massachusetts Civil War veterans including Benjamin Butler, Winfield Hancock and Nathaniel Banks. Important women include Lucy Stone and Mary Livermore.

Three signatures that may have

arrived too late???

The celebrity quilt was a fashion in the last part of the 19th-century. It appears the autograph collector sent white silk squares to famous people and then framed each with red triangles, set the blocks with blue sashing and tied the silk quilt with red and white yarn.

There's a handwritten list of signatories.

In 1883, the ladies of Cleveland, New York "succeeded in obtaining the signature of President

Arthur and Governor [Grover] Cleveland. At an auction held in the church the other night it was knocked down to a Philistine at the low price of $7."

This is not the same quilt, Celebrity quilts and soldiers' quilts were a trend in the 1870s and '80s.